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Climate change is behind increasing flight turbulence, Transportation Sec’y Pete Buttigieg says

cnbc.com
submitted
a year ago
byhumboldttonews

Summary

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg says climate change is one of the culprits behind an increase in flight turbulence. A study published last year found that there have been increases in clear-air turbulence (CAT) between 1979 and 2020. His comments come as turbulence has wreaked havoc on a number of flights so far this year.

The FAA gave Boeing 90 days to come up with a plan to improve quality of air. "The concerning part, of course, is that any of these issues are happening at all," says Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg. The company will meet with the FAA on Thursday.

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6 Comments

3
x0x7
a year ago
Doubt!
2
practicalmagic
a year ago
Any explanation on the doubt? Asking for real, especially if there's info that says differently
1
x0x7
a year ago
Because air doesn't flow in a significantly different way at minutely different temperatures. If there was some significant non-linear effect that happened right around the ambient temperatures we see in flight then when the temperature at ground level is 75 degrees they would be saying there is zero chance of turbulence and at 76 they would be freaking out. Turbulence just isn't that temperature sensitive.
2
practicalmagic
a year ago*
But the cumulative effect of longer term higher temperatures would cause these levels of turbulence to become more frequent. Nobody is saying that the temperature going from 75 to 76 on any given day would somehow cause bad turbulence. Nor is anybody saying we haven't seen bad turbulence like this before. The problem is in the higher frequency of more problematic turbulence which will cause the average flight to start experiencing problems instead of the opposite.
3
eldiscipulo
a year ago
So what gets done about this? It's just going to get worse until planes start falling out of the sky?
2
joseph
a year ago
Once again, an unforeseen consequence of climate change /s